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The Only True Way
The Only True Way;
Or,
An Useful, Good, And Helpful Tract,
Pointing Out The Path Of Truth.
1677.
The Only True Way
Beloved friend and brother, under the name of this glorious Art
there is to be found much false teaching which is put forward by
pseudo-alchemists, whose writings are nothing but imposture and deceit,
and are yet highly esteemed by people of the simpler sort. These
charlatans induce their dupes to waste much money and time on that which
can profit them nothing; for unless a thing be well begun, it can never
be brought to a good end. Yet most men, who, nowadays, have devoted
themselves to this exalted art of chemistry, are pursuing a wrong
course, and are deceivers or deceived. The deceivers are conscious of
their own ignorance, and try to veil it under an obscure and allegorical
style. The less they really know, the more pompous and the more
unintelligible do their speculations become. But the reader, who is
puzzled by their perplexing style, may at least comfort himself with the
assurance that he knows as much about the matter as the authors. That
assurance must serve for a kind of clue to the endless labyrinth of
their false sublimations, calcinations, distillations, solutions,
coagulations, putrefactions, and corruptions. Nevertheless, we may
almost every (lay see foolish persons spend their whole substance on
those absurd experiments, being induced to do so by the aforesaid
pseudo-alchemists, who impose on them with a false process, and fanciful
perversions of Nature.
With these useless and unnecessary experiments the true Alchemists
will have nothing to do. They follow the method pursued by Nature in the
veins of the earth, which is very simple, and includes no solutions,
putrefactions, coagulations, or anything of the kind Can Nature, in the
heart of the earth, where the metals do grow and receive increase, have
anything corresponding to all those pseudo-alchemistical instruments
alembics, retorts, circulatory and sublimatory phials, fires, and other
materials, such as cobbler's wax, salt, arsenic mercury, sulphur, and so
forth? Can all these things really be necessary for the growth and
increase of the metals? It is surprising that any one not entirely
bereft of his senses can spend many years in the study of alchemy, and
yet never get beyond those foolish and frivolous solutions,
coagulations, putrefactions, distillations, while Nature is so simple
and unsophisticated in her methods. Surely every true Artist must look
upon this elaborate tissue of baseless operations as the merest folly,
and can only wonder that the eyes of those silly dupes are not at last
opened, that they may see something besides such absurd sophisms, and
read something besides those stupid and deceitful books. It seems that
they are so entangled in their sophisms that they can never attain to
the freedom of true philosophy.
But let me tell you that so long as you love lies, and turn away from
rational philosophy, you will never find the right way. I can speak from
bitter experience. For I, too, toiled for many years in accordance with
those sophistic methods, and endeavoured to reach the coveted goal by
sublimation, distillation, calcination, circulation, and so forth, and
to fashion the Stone out of substances such as urine, salt, atrament,
alum, etc. I have tried hard to evolve it out of hairs, wine, eggs,
bones, and all manner of herbs; out of arsenic, mercury, and sulphur,
and all the minerals and metals. I have striven to elicit it by means of
aqua fortis and alkali. I have spent nights and days in dissolving,
coagulating, amalgamating, and precipitating. Yet from all these things
I derived neither profit nor joy. I had hoped much from the
quintessence, but it disappointed me like the rest.
Therefore, beloved brother, let me warn you to have nothing to do
with sublimations of sulphur and mercury, or the solution of bodies, or
the coagulation of spirits, or with all the innumerable alembics, which
bear little profit unto veritable art. So long as you do not seek the
true essence of Nature, your labours will be doomed to failure-
therefore, if you desire success, you must once for all renounce your
allegiance to all those old methods, and enlist under the standards of
that method which proceeds in strict obedience to the teaching of Nature
- in short, the method which Nature herself pursues in the bowels of the
earth. For you see that Nature uses only one substance in her work of
developing and perfecting the metals, and that this substance includes
everything that is required. Now, this substance appears to call for no
special treatment, except that of digestion by gentle heat, which must
be continued until it has reached its highest possible degree of
development. For this simple heating process the cunning sophists have
substituted solutions, coagulations, calcinations, putrefactions,
sublimations, and other fantastical operations - which are only
different names for the same thing; and thereby they have multiplied a
thousand-fold the difficulties of this undertaking, and given rise to
the popular notion that it is a most arduous, hazardous, and ruinously
expensive enterprise. This they have simply done out of jealousy and
malice, to put others off the right track, and to involve them in
poverty and ruin. But they will find it difficult to justify their
conduct before God, who has commanded us to love our neighbours as
ourselves. For out of sheer malice they have rendered the road of truth
impassable, and perplexed a simple natural process with such an
elaborate tissue of circumstantial nomenclature, as to make the
amelioration of the metals appear a hopelessly difficult task. For while
you heat, you also putrefy, or decompose, as you may see by the changes
which a grain of wheat undergoes in the. ground under the influence of
the rain and of the sun; you know that it must first decay before new
life can spring forth. It is this process which they have denominated
putrefaction and solution. Again when you heat, you also sublime, and to
this coction they have applied the terms sublimation and multiplication,
that the simple man might err more easily. In like manner coagulation
takes place in heating; for they say that coagulation takes place when
humidity is changed into the nature of fire, so as to be able to resist
the action of fire, without evaporating, or being consumed. And heating
also includes that which they call "circulation," or conjunction, or the
union of fire with water to prevent complete combustion. Thus you see
that that which they have called by so many names is really but one
simple process. The substance, which is one, they have described
under a similar variety of appellations, to prevent men from finding
that which, by the grace of God, can provide for them so many precious
blessings. In the first place they call it "our mercury," by which they
mean nothing but moisture, which begins to unite itself with the fire,
and therefore may be compared to mercury. Again, they use the
expression, "our sulphur," whereby they mean nothing but the fire
itself, which lies hid beneath the water, or humidity, and is heated by
the water to its highest degree. Then, again, they call it Hyle, or the
First Substance, because all things are first generated out of water and
fire. Other names, such as Arsenic, Orpiment, Bismuth, are not used by
the Sages at all, but only by certain ignorant charlatans, of whom we
need not take any further notice. Let us follow the guidance of Nature:
she will not lead us astray.
If you let this be your motto, you will surely be able to call to
mind the first substance, out of which all metallic substances are
generated. But before we consider this question, it will much behove you
to understand why the Sun, Moon, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn, are
metals, and what is their origin. Besides finding an answer to this
question, you must also bear in mind that all created things are divided
into three kingdoms, viz., the animal, the vegetable, and the mineral.
To the first belong all living things that have flesh and blood; to the
second all herbs, plants, and trees; to the third all metals, stones,
and everything that cannot be burned.
But, though divided into three classes, yet all things, O my brother,
may be traced back to one common Principle, from which they derive their
generation, or birth. By different varieties of heat this first
substance is transmuted in various ways, and assumes different specific
forms. Since, then, Nature is so simple, I advise you once more to have
done with all those foolish sublimations, coagulations, and
putrefactions, and the ridiculous old wives' fables which are even now
believed by many, and simply to follow Nature, and her unsophisticated
methods: then she will take you by the hand, and guide you to the true
substance. For the only method of correcting or ameliorating Nature,
consists in the natural heating of essences. Now, this Essence, my
friend, is the principal thing, on which depends the whole matter. This
simple truth, the vulgar herd of alchemists seem quite unable to
understand, and thus go on toiling day by day with substances which have
nothing to do with the matter. They might as well sow horn, or wood, or
stones, and expect a golden harvest of corn. The sun and moon
cannot be made out of all substances, but only out of the natural
Essence out of which all things are formed, being afterwards
differentiated into divers substances by different varieties of heat.
Thus the special quality of every individual thing is to be referred to
the degree of its coction. If, therefore, we wish to exercise the true
Art of Alchemy, we must imitate the method by which Nature does her work
in the bowels of the earth.
The ancients have named many colours in connexion with this process,
such as black, white, citrine, red, green, and so forth. All this is
simply intended to lead you astray from the right road, and to keep you
in ignorance. Those ancient writers were constantly at the greatest
pains to obscure their style with such a perplexing variety of
allegorical expressions as to render it impossible for the ordinary
reader to understand their meaning.
Therefore, I would again and again exhort you not to believe them
when they tell you that you must have or take a black substance, or that
the substance turns black, white, and red in the course of the chemical
process. The black colour was suggested to them by the fact that the
substance or essence at first mingles with a brilliant material fire, by
which a liquid is separated from the essence in the form of a certain
black fume. This black fume the ancients called the Black Raven, and the
essence they denominated the Raven's Head. This separation you should
carefully observe. From it the ancients learned that the separation of
natural substances is nothing but a natural defect of the heating
process. This, again, suggested to them the consideration that those
essences that had been imperfectly heated by Nature, might be aided in a
natural manner by ordinary fire, and that thus the essences which are
still combustible, and their liquids (which the ancients invidiously
called mercury) being black when they are separated from the essence,
might be perfected by art, and the essences guarded against combustion
by their liquid, and the liquid rendered incapable of being separated
from the essence. This the ancients called "our sulphur." For after this
preparation the essence is no longer vegetable or animal, but by the
perfection of its heating it has become a mineral essence, and is
therefore called sulphur; the essence is nothing but an elementary
fire, and its liquid, which is guarded against combustion, is true
elementary air, and, because air is naturally warm and moist, it is
called mercury by those jealous ancients. Air contains in itself the
nature of fire, and elementary fire, again, contains within itself the
nature of air: thus, by the union of their common elements, a true
amalgamation of the two can take place. Such are the material fire and
water which we see. These material elements are nothing but an aid to
the essences of the elements by which they can be naturally reduced to
the highest degree (of perfection?). This gradation is the only true
Alchemy, and there is none beside. The pseudo-alchemy of our modern
charlatans is mere waste of money and time.
It would be a great mistake for you to suppose that you can derive
any real knowledge from the writings of the Sages. They show you only
the outside, and conceal the internal Essence. To you they offer the
husks, but the finest of the wheat they keep for themselves. They show
you a way which they do not dream of treading. I advise you, therefore,
in future, to give them a wide berth; or you will only enrich the
apothecaries while you plunge yourself and your family into the deepest
poverty; nay, instead of gaining the universal panacea, you will
contract the most dangerous diseases from constantly moving in an
atmosphere black with sulphurous and mercurial smoke, and fetid with the
stench of bismuth and all manner of salts.
It is truly amazing that none of the seekers after this great
treasure, though willing to submit to any amount of labour and hardship
for its sake, seem capable of perceiving the lesson which constant
failure is striving to impress upon them. What, I pray you, have those
thousands of persons, who have tried the solutions, coagulations,
putrefactions, amalgamations, and circulations, gained by their
agonising toil? What good result have they produced with their waters,
solutions of metals, blood, hair, eggs, milk, sugar, and all manner of
herbs? Let me beseech you to profit by their heart-breaking experience,
and to have done with everything but true Alchemy, which teaches that
the substance is brought to perfection, and attains the exaltation of
elementary fire, by its own light and liquid- by which also imperfect
metals are ameliorated, because their elementary fire was not properly
digested by its liquid. And for the same reason the elementary fire
cannot remain, for the liquid is separated from that elementary fire by
the heat of the ordinary fire, and evaporates in the form of white
smoke. The elementary fire, on the other hand, does not evaporate, but
abides with its earth, and must be burned with it, because its
protecting liquid has vanished in white smoke. This is that whiteness of
which the Ancients have said that it comes after the black colour. For
this reason, they are in the habit of saying that you must make it black
before you make it white. We begin our process with blackness, and
transmute the black smoke, but do not take it for our substance, and
make it white. The latter would be a foolish supposition and imposture.
If you would avoid such misapprehensions, you must not attempt the study
of this subject until you have a sound knowledge of the operations of
Nature, and more especially of the essential properties of the metals.
I am afraid, my Brother, that my book will cause you heaviness of
heart, instead of joy, because I sweep away at one fell stroke all those
false sophistical notions which had become so dear to you. Nevertheless,
you must once for all relinquish that idea of yours that you are
profoundly versed in the mysteries of this Art, and leave these childish
absurdities to those who derive wealth and profit from them. Among these
persons, Adam de Bodenstein held a very distinguished place; for he
wrote all manner of so-called theosophical books, and boasted of his
attainments in the alchemistic Art, of which he was really quite
ignorant. Yet to the present day many people believe that he (whose
expressions are those of a mere charlatan) had a real knowledge of true
alchemy. It is true that his nonsense cannot for a moment impose on the
initiated; but among the blind (as the proverb says) it is easy to win
golden opinions as a good fencer. On this account, and as Bodenstein is
no more among the living, I will dismiss the subject, for nothing but
what is favourable should be spoken of the dead and of the absent. This
I will say, however, that he was a good Sophist and a good physician;
but of Alchemy he knew little or nothing. I should not have said this
much if I were not really anxious to warn the unwary against being
dazzled by the splendour of his name, and to prevent them from being
lured on by it to their own ruin.
If, then, you are a lover of the truth, you will bid farewell to
these specious absurdities, and henceforth entrust yourself to the
guidance of Nature alone; be sure that she will lead you onward without
faltering to the desired goal, even that method by which she works
towards the essence. Moreover, she will demand of you neither much
labour nor any considerable outlay The whole thing is done by a simple
process of heating, which includes the solution and coagulation of the
bodies, and also the sublimation and putrefaction. But some writers have
substituted for the simple and true essence a certain other essence,
with which they have deceived the whole world, and involved many persons
in considerable losses. Whether their conduct was upright and loving
will one day be decided by the Great Judge. It would be better not to
publish such writings, since the false statements and groundless
assertions with which they swarm, plunge so many credulous persons into
grievous losses. For if there were not so many books put forward by
ignorant writers, many thousands of persons who at the present moment
are hopelessly floundering about in a sea of specious book-learning
would have been led by the light of their own unaided intellects to the
knowledge of this precious secret; they are prevented, these many years,
from seeing the plain truth by a vast mass of printed nonsense which
commands their reverence, because they do not understand it. The
Ancients did indeed know something about the Art; but at the present day
we can very well dispense with the cumbrous phraseology under which they
(most successfully) attempted to veil their meaning. It can only tend to
the bewilderment of honest enquirers, who are thereby thrown off the
true scent, unless indeed they should come to be instructed by living
Masters.
I myself may not speak out as plainly as I would, for I am silenced
by the vow which binds all the masters of the Art, the curse that lights
on those who violate the sacred seal of Nature's secrets, and the
malediction of all the philosophers. Therefore, I must exhort you again
and again to trust your own observations rather than the writings of
others, and to let the Book of Nature be the most favoured volume of
your library. Observe her methods, not only in the production of metals,
but in the procreation of the fruits of the earth, and their constant
growth and development, in the winter and summer, in the spring and
autumn, by rain and sunshine. If you had a sound knowledge of Nature's
methods in producing the bud and the flower, and in ripening the green
fruit, you would be able to set your hand to the germs which Nature
provides in the bowels of the earth, and to educe from them (or their
substance) that which you so much desire. Forgive me then, my Brother,
for so unceremoniously overthrowing all your old settled and dearly
cherished convictions. My excuse must be that I have done it for your
own good, as you would otherwise never learn the true secret of
transmuting metals. You may believe and trust me, for I can have no
conceivable motive for filling the world with fresh lies of which, God
knows, it is already full enough, through the agency of the aforesaid
deceivers and their willing dupes, who after being lured on by those
false books to the loss of all their worldly goods, have not suffered
their eyes to be opened by their losses, and seem unable to find their
way out of that gigantic labyrinth of falsehood. Nay, they have even
taken upon themselves to write books, and to speak as if they were
perfect masters of the Art, and had derived great advantage from it,
though in reality they have been brought so low as to be able to afford
nothing but miserable decoctions. They dissolved until their whole
fortune had undergone a process of dissolution; they sublimed until all
their gold and silver had evaporated; they putrefied until their clothes
decayed upon their bodies; and they calcined until all their wood and
coal were consumed to ashes, and they themselves were reduced to wallet
and staff.
This is the prize which they have won with all their trouble. Let
their ruin be a warning to you, my Brother. For their alchemy instead of
imparting health, is followed by penury and disease; instead of
transmuting copper into gold, it changes gold into copper and brass.
Consider also how many ignorant persons, such as cobblers, tailors,
bankrupt merchants, and tavern keepers, pretend to a knowledge of this
Art, and, after a few years' unsuccessful experimenting in the
laboratory, call themselves great doctors, announce in boastful and
sesquipedalian language their power to cure many diseases, and promise
mountains of gold. Those promises are empty wind, and their medicines
rank poison, with which they fill the churchyards, and for the impudent
abuse of which God will one day visit them with heavy punishment. But I
will leave the magistrates and the jailers to deal with these swindling
charlatans. I speak of them only to put you on your guard. If so many
persons write on the subject of Alchemy, who know nothing whatever about
the nature and generation of metals, it becomes all the more necessary
for you to be careful what books you read, and how much you believe.
For I tell you truly that so long as you have no real and fundamental
knowledge of the nature of the metals, you cannot make much progress in
the true Art of Alchemy, or understand the natural transmutation of
metals. You must grasp the meaning of every direction before you can put
it into effect. Always mistrust that which you do not understand (i.e.,
in studying this art). There are many false ways, but there can be only
one that is true, and indicates a process which does not require many
hands, or much labour. For this reason, beloved friend and Brother, you
must work hard by day and by night to obtain a thorough knowledge of the
metals, and of their essential nature. Then you will be able to
understand the requirements of the art. You will know without being told
what is the true substance and the true method. You will see the utter
uselessness of your former labour, and you will be amazed at your former
blindness. Study the nature of metals and the causes of their
generation, for they derive their birth from the same source as all
other created things.
For as by a heating process the infant is developed in the mother's
womb out of the father's seed, and as the chicken is brought forth out
of the egg by the natural incubation of the hen, so the metals, too, are
developed in a certain way out of a certain substance. Yet I do not say,
my Brother, that mercury and sulphur are the first substance of metals.
Those juggling deceivers have told you so; but in the veins of the
earth, where the metals grow, are found neither mercury nor sulphur.
Therefore, when they speak of sulphur, you must understand them to
allude to elementary fire, and by mercury you must understand the
liquid. In a similar lying spirit they have called fire (elementary)
"our Sun," and the liquid "our Moon," or the elementary fire soul, and
the elementary liquid spirit, because elementary substances are
invisible. The soul is invisible fire, and the spirit invisible
moisture: the outward essential fire and water they have called '
bodies,' because they are visible and palpable. Nay, they try to make
you believe that these are metallic bodies, and that you must dissolve
them. But do not let them deceive you. Be on your guard against their
dishonest tricks, and cunning devices, by which they set you to
experiment with metallic bodies, when they really mean the metallic
essence.
They point out to you various materials and substances,
notwithstanding that there is only one true substance, and one true
method. Be sure that their solutions, coagulations, sublimations,
calcinations, and putrefactions, do not represent the method of Nature
in the heart of the earth, where the metals grow. For pious Nature only
heats the elementary fire which is thereby ameliorated and fixed through
its liquid; which latter she also changes, by various degrees of heat,
into all the various objects which compose the three natural
kingdoms-and although now it is differentiated into bodies so different
as vegetables, animals, and minerals, yet they have all originally
sprung from one common substance, all have one root, which the Ancients
denominated the first Matter or Hyle. But it is really nothing but
hidden elementary fire, with its liquid, which the Ancients called the
root liquid, radical moisture, or humid radical, because it is the root
of all created things.
This liquid, with its fire, is differentiated into the various kinds
of natural bodies, by the various degrees of heat, or 'coction,' which
take place in them. One thing is more perfectly heated in its elementary
fire through its liquid, than another. The vegetable nature is that in
which the coction is least perfect. Therefore its essence is easily
burned, and its liquid easily separated from its elementary fire, by
common fire.
The coction of the animal is almost as imperfect as that of
the vegetable substance: for its essence is easily burned. The coction
of the mineral substances is the most perfect of all, because in
them the metallic liquid is more closely united (by coction) to its
elementary fire. Hence metals are better able to resist common fire than
the vegetable and animal substances. When a metal is placed in the fire,
it does not burn with a bright flame like wood; for the liquid of wood
is not so completely joined (by coction) to its essence, as the liquid
of metals is to its essence. The union of the liquid with the essence is
not metallic, but vegetable, for which reason the latter is consumed
with a black smoke, when, by a higher degree of coction, the vegetable
has been transmuted into a metallic essence, it no longer gives out a
black smoke in common fire, but a white smoke, as you may see when
imperfect metals are melted in the fire. That is why the Ancients said
that you must first make the substance black before you make it white,
i.e., it must first give out a black smoke before it gives out a white.
Again they say: You must first make it white before you make it red. To
make red is to make perfect, because gold and silver have been rendered
perfect by coction, their essence being fully united to their liquid,
and changed into pure fire.
Do not then suffer yourself to be thrown off your guard by the
obscure phraseology of the Ancients. If you thoroughly study the simple
fundamental nature of the metals, you will know what their enigmatic
expressions mean, and will not, like some moderns, conclude from their
writings that you must take a certain substance and dissolve it until it
turns black., then again purify and calcine it till the blackness
disappears and it begins to turn white; and after that, once more
increase the fire and calcine and toil until the substance turns red.
Such an interpretation of the language of the Ancients can only suggest
itself to persons entirely ignorant of the nature of metallic
substances; indeed, the Ancients wrote as they did solely in order to
hide their real meaning from all but the close students of Nature. To
this end they were in the constant habit of employing the terms "mercury
" and "sulphur." And although the metallic essence is the true substance
which, by natural coction, must be raised from the lowest to the highest
stage of development, and although the meaning of the Ancients is
intelligible enough to the initiated, yet the ignorant can gather from
their language no more than the fact that the substance must be taken
from the metals. But where are they to obtain it, and how are they to
bring it to perfection?
The metallic essence can not be separated from the imperfect metals
without being injured; for if it be separated with fire the liquid must
evaporate, and the essence (with its earth) be consumed. Nor will you be
able to separate the essence of the imperfect metals by means of aqua
fortis, arsenic, aqua vita-, or alkali, without injuring the essence and
its liquid by the foreign moisture: for the metallic nature can bear no
foreign substance, and if any foreign moisture combines with the
metallic liquid, it loses its proper quality and is entirely corrupted.
The metallic essence of the perfect metals you cannot obtain in a
separate form; for their liquid and elementary fire are welded together
by so perfect a process of coction, and so closely united with their
earth, that neither fire nor water can avail to separate them, seeing
that the fire has no power over them, and no foreign moisture can
combine with, or corrupt, the liquid of perfect metals. All your labour
will be in vain: the coction has done its work so well that you will
never be able to undo it.
Hence, the Ancients said that there was no sulphur in anything but in
the metals, and hence also they called the metallic liquid quicksilver.
But names do not alter facts: the fact is that the elementary fire must
be so united to its elementary liquid by natural coction that they
become indivisible. For the liquid protects the fire against combustion,
so that both remain fixed and unchanged in common fire. This perfected
substance the Ancients have well called Elixir, or fire which has
undergone a process of perfect coction: for that which before was crude
and raw is "cooked," or digested by the process of coction. That element
which, by its imperfection, causes base metals to be broken up and
disintegrated by fire, has been digested and perfected by natural heat.
For this reason you must not grudge the labour which the proper
performance of this heating process demands, seeing that it includes
purification, sublimation, dissolution, and all the other chemical
processes enumerated by the ancient alchemists. All these you may safely
dismiss from your mind, as they can cause you nothing but trouble, loss,
and waste of time. My purpose in writing this faithful admonition is to
caution you again and again to beware of those pitfalls with which the
contemptuous obscurity of the Ancients has so plentifully beset the path
of the ingenuous enquirer. I also desired to suggest to you the true
substance, and the one true method and have throughout
endeavoured to express myself in a style as free from allegorical
obscurity as possible. I have recalled you from your wanderings in the
pathless wilderness, and put you in the right way. Now you must beseech
Almighty God to give you the real philosophical temper, and to open your
eyes to the facts of nature. Thus alone you will be able to reach the
coveted goal.
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